aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/blog/20200528.org
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'blog/20200528.org')
-rw-r--r--blog/20200528.org40
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 40 deletions
diff --git a/blog/20200528.org b/blog/20200528.org
deleted file mode 100644
index b37498d..0000000
--- a/blog/20200528.org
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
-#+TITLE: kiss 2.0.0 and Overall Changes
-#+AUTHOR: Cem Keylan
-#+DATE: <2020-05-28 Thu>
-
-Carbs Linux kiss version 2.0.0 has been released which introduces rsync
-repositories.
-
-Git is no longer a mandatory dependency for the package manager, every git
-source on the core repository has been replaced with https sources (sbase,
-sinit), and rootfs tarballs will no longer ship with git. Repositories in the
-upcoming tarball will be rsync repositories.
-
-Git is now on the =extra= repository and is still (optionally) used in the
-package manager.
-
-The idea behind this change is size reductions and increased speed with rsync.
-As I said on the previous post, git repositories get larger and larger over the
-time span. Currently my personal copy of the git repository is around 77MB and I
-have forked KISS Linux (as a shallow copy) around December. Obviously, I have
-commits that I ommitted. I tend to create commits I dislike, which I change with
-=git reset --soft HEAD^=, which doesn't actually remove the commits, etc. A user
-will have a repository much smaller than mine.
-
-This is a precaution with the added bonuses of speed and dropping a mandatory
-dependency.
-
-You can see the rest of the changelog [[https://github.com/CarbsLinux/kiss/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md][here]].
-
-** Binary Repositories
-:PROPERTIES:
-:CUSTOM_ID: binary-repository
-:END:
-
-A few days ago, I have also published [[https://github.com/CarbsLinux/kiss-bin][kiss-bin]], a first version for managing
-binary repositories. Currently, there are some caveats that I'll be fixing along
-the way. I decided not to include this in the package manager natively as
-managing the source based and binary based packages together adds levels of
-complexity that we do not want. Instead, this is an extension for kiss which
-sources the package manager as a library. I hope to see it being adopted by
-others interested on the matter as well.